The precise question which this case presents does not seem to have been decided by the supreme court of the United States. That question is, whether, if a contract is made between two citizens of the same state within the state, and one of them afterwards removes therefrom and becomes a citizen of another state, and the other then obtains a discharge under the provisions of an insolvent law of the state where the contract was made, which was enacted and in force before the *88date of the contract, such a discharge is effectual as a bar to a suit upon the contract. It has been held to be a bar in this Commonwealth. Brigham v. Henderson, 1 Cush. 430. Converse v. Bradley, Ib. 434, note. In the first of these cases the contract was both made, and, by its terms, to be performed in Massachusetts; but in Converse v. Bradley it only appears to have been a promissory note, made within the Commonwealth, no place of payment being designated.. The latter case is therefore a direct authority in point.
The decision in Scribner v. Fisher, 2 Gray, 43, that a discharge under the insolvent law of Massachusetts is valid against a creditor who was a citizen of another state at the time the contract was made, if it was, by its express terms, to be performed in this Commonwealth, has been overruled by the supreme court of the United States in Baldwin v. Hale, 1 Wallace, 223; and the subsequent action of this court has conformed to the doctrine of Baldwin v. Hale. Kelley v. Drury, 9 Allen, 27. But the opinion in Baldwin v. Hale does not in any manner advert to the decision in Brigham v. Henderson; and Mr. Justice Metcalf, who dissented from his associates in Scribner v. Fisher, gave the opinion of the court in that case.
Regret has been frequently expressed by judges of the courts of the United States, as well as by those of the several states, that with all the learning and ability which have been bestowed upon the discussion it has not been found practicable to place the decisions on this important subject upon some clear and intelligible basis of principle. But the reasons given by different judges for coming to the same conclusions have been so diverse, and the grounds assigned for judgments not certainly repugnant to each other have been sometimes so apparently inconsistent, that it is difficult to do more than follow adjudged cases in their literal application, without attempting to gather from them a rule which will afford a sure solution of new questions.
It is settled that a state insolvent law is constitutional, which applies to contracts made after its enactment, within the state and not to be performed elsewhere, if made between citizens of( the state, who continue citizens at the time a discharge is ob* *89tained, and at the time the action is brought upon the contract. If the contract is made between citizens of the state, it has been held, in Brigham v. Henderson and Converse v. Bradley, that the power to grant a discharge is not impaired by a subsequent removal of the creditor to another state. Nothing inconsistent with these decisions has been decided by the supreme court of the United States. We therefore feel bound to adhere to them, being satisfied that a preponderance of opinion in the discussion of cases which have so far arisen in the national tribunals is in their favor, and that they are correct in principle.
The suggestion that the power of a state over the contracts of its citizens is limited by the power to make them parties to the proceedings in insolvency, does not seem to us well founded, because we think that the effect of the insolvent law qualifies the contract from its inception; and the question of the sufficiency of the notice to creditors to make them so far parties as to be bound by these proceedings does not seem to be one over which the courts of the United States have any peculiar jurisdiction. Judgment for the defendmt.